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(Allusion to title)
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Clive Priestly: The Twelfth Night Murders
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If music be the food of love, play on. (I,i)
William P. Frith: The Duel Scene
from "Twelfth Night"
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Anthony P. Cavallo: The Food of Love
Christopher Bond: The Food of Love
Julia Helen Twells: The Food of Love
Stephen Poliakoff: Food of Love
Michael De Cossart: The Food of Love:
Princess Edmond De Polignac, 1865-1943, and Her Salon
Christopher Campling: The Food of Love:
Reflections on Music and Faith
Adrian Ball, ed.: Food of Love: The Favorite
Feasts of the World's Music-Makers
Jolang Chang: The Food of Love and Sex:
The Tao of Loving, Living and Eating
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O mistress mine, where are you roaming?
O, stay and hear; your true love's coming,
That can sing both high and low:
Trip no further, pretty sweeting;
Journeys end in lovers' meeting,
Every wise man's son doth know.
What is love? 'tis not hereafter;
Present mirth hath present laughter;
What's to come is still unsure;
In delay there lies no plenty;
Then come kiss me, sweet and twenty,
Youth's a stuff will not endure.
(II,iii)

Edwin Austin Abbey:
O Mistress Mine, Where Are You Roaming?
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Ernest Farrar: O Mistress Mine
Eric H. Thiman: O Mistress Mine
Mary Howe: O Mistress Mine
Kingsley W. Tarpey: O Mistress Mine
Daniel Beltzhoover: O Mistress Mine
Robert Greenwood: O Mistress Mine
Terence Rattigan: O Mistress Mine
Mollie Hardwick: Lovers Meeting
A. Wright, ed.: Lovers Meeting
Laurence Housman: Lovers Meeting
Katharine Tynan: Lovers' Meeting
Eleanor Furneaux Smith: Lovers' Meeting
Noel Coward: Present Laughter
Malcolm Bradbury, ed.: Present Laughter
Floyd Dell: Sweet and Twenty
Mortimer Collins: Sweet and Twenty
Eleanor Everest Freer: Sweet and Twenty
Don Morro: Sweet and Twenty
Mary Farley Sanborn: Sweet and Twenty
Joan Smith: Sweet and Twenty
Paul Grabill: Youth's a Stuff Will Not Endure
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Dost thou think, because thou art virtuous,
there shall be no more cakes and ale?
(II,iii)
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W. Somerset Maugham: Cakes and Ale
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The spinsters and the knitters in the sun
And the free maids that weave their thread with
bones
Do use to chant it. (II,iv)
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Algernon Gissing: Knitters in the Sun
Alice French: Knitters in the Sun
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Come away, come away, death,
And in sad cypress let me
be laid;
Fly away, fly away, breath;
I am slain by a fair
cruel maid. (II,iv)
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John Kirkpatrick: Come Away, Death
Gladys Mitchell: Come Away, Death
A. G. Wilson: Come Away, Death
Agatha Christie: Sad Cypress
Peter Malloch: Fly Away Death
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She never told her love,
But let concealment, like a worm i' the bud,
Feed on her damask cheek. (II,iv)
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Ronald Pearsall: The Worm in the Bud
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I am all the daughters of my father's house. (II,iv)

Edmund Blair Leighton:
Olivia
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Ferdinand Gumbert: My Father's House
James M. MacDonald: My Father's House...
Shirley Eclov: My Father's House
Henri Toyat: My Father's House
Meyer Levin: My Father's House
Pierrepont Burt Noyes: My Father's House
Richard Holzapfel: My Father's House
Sylvia Fraser: My Father's House
James Northey: My Father's House
Yigal Allon: My Father's House
Jean-Guy Carrier: My Father's House
Kathleen Conlon: My Father's House
Philip B Kunhardt: My Father's House
Dedian Vanderstaay: My Father's House
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Daylight and champaign discovers no more. (II,v)
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G. M. Young: Daylight and Champaign
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In my stars I am above thee; but be not
afraid of greatness; some are born great,
some achieve greatness, and some have
greatness thrust upon 'em. (II,v)
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Adela Rogers St. John: Some Are Born Great
Frank Swinnerton: Some Achieve Greatness
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Why, this is very midsummer madness. (III,iv)

Frederick Richard
Pickersgill:
Viola and the Countess
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C. Armstrong Gibbs: Midsummer Madness
Raymond Buxton: Midsummer Madness
Langdon Dodge: Midsummer Madness
Morley Roberts: Midsummer Madness
Victor Wolfson: Midsummer Madness
Glenn Hughes: Midsummer Madness
Phyllis Taylor Pianka: Midsummer Madness
Christine Rimmer: Midsummer Madness
Lindsay Barbee: Midsummer Madness
Sterling North: Midsummer Madness
Clifford Bax: Midsummer Madness
Ellen Warner Kirk: Midsummer Madness
Emilia Pardo Bazan: Midsummer Madness
Emily Cameron: Midsummer Madness
Sean O'Faolain: Midsummer Night Madness
and Other Stories
Jill Barnett et alia: Midsummer Night's
Madness
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What, man! defy the devil: consider, he's
an enemy to mankind. (III,iv)
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Sara Woods: Defy the Devil
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If this were played upon a stage now, I
could condemn it as an improbable
fiction. (III,iv)
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Sara Woods: An Improbable Fiction
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This youth that you see here
I snatch'd one half out of the jaws of
death. (III,iv)
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Grant Allen: The Jaws of Death
James Edwin Houston: The Jaws of Death
Lee Thayer: The Jaws of Death
Xavier Maniguet: The Jaws of Death
Colonel Mike Snook: Into the Jaws of Death
Dietrich Von Hildebrand: Jaws of Death,
Gate of Heaven
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Thus the whirligig of time brings in his revenges. (V,i)
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Dola DeJong: The Whirligig of Time
Lloyd Biggle: The Whirligig of Time
Subodh Chandra Sen Gupta: Whirligig of Time
Wayland Williams: Whirligig of Time
Isabel Bolton: Whirligig of Time
David Christie Murray: Time's Revenges
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